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Formal Verification at Intel
Ottawa, Canada June 22-June 25
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/LICS.2003.121004418th Annual IEEE Symposium on Logic i ...
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John Harrison, Intel Corporation
As designs become more complex, formal verification techniques are becoming increasingly important in the hardware industry. Many different methods are used, ranging from propositional tautology checking up to the use of interactive higher-order theorem provers. Our own work is mainly concerned with the formal verification of floating-point mathematical functions. As this paper aims to illustrate, such applications require a rather general mathematical framework and the ability to automate special-purpose proof algorithms in a reliable way. Our work uses the public-domain interactive theorem prover HOL Light, and we claim that this and similar ?LCF-style? theorem provers are a good choice for such applications.
Citation:
John Harrison, "Formal Verification at Intel," lics, pp.45, 18th Annual IEEE Symposium on Logic in Computer Science (LICS'03), 2003
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